On Tue, 12 Dec 2017 19:45:32 +0000, Al Viro wrote: > On Tue, Dec 12, 2017 at 06:20:02AM +0000, Al Viro wrote: > > > Umm... What's wrong with > > > > #define FIELD_FOO 0,4 > > #define FIELD_BAR 6,12 > > #define FIELD_BAZ 18,14 > > > > A macro can bloody well expand to any sequence of tokens - le32_get_bits(v, > > FIELD_BAZ) > > will become le32_get_bits(v, 18, 14) just fine. What's the problem with > > that? > > FWIW, if you want to use the mask, __builtin_ffsll() is not the only way to do > it - you don't need the shift. Multiplier would do just as well, and that can > be had easier. If mask = (2*a + 1)<<n = ((2*a)<<n) ^ (1<<n), then > mask - 1 = ((2*a) << n) + ((1<<n) - 1) = ((2*n) << n) ^ ((1<<n) - 1) > mask ^ (mask - 1) = (1<<n) + ((1<<n) - 1) > and > mask & (mask ^ (mask - 1)) = 1<<n. > > IOW, with > > static __always_inline u64 mask_to_multiplier(u64 mask) > { > return mask & (mask ^ (mask - 1)); > } > > we could do > > static __always_inline __le64 le64_replace_bits(__le64 old, u64 v, u64 mask) > { > __le64 m = cpu_to_le64(mask); > return (old & ~m) | (cpu_to_le64(v * mask_to_multiplier(mask)) & m); > } > > static __always_inline u64 le64_get_bits(__le64 v, u64 mask) > { > return (le64_to_cpu(v) & mask) / mask_to_multiplier(mask); > } > > etc. Compiler will turn those into shifts... I can live with either calling > conventions. > > Comments?
Very nice! The compilation-time check if the value can fit in a field covered by the mask (if they're both known) did help me catch bugs early a few times over the years, so if it could be preserved we can maybe even drop the FIELD_* macros and just use this approach?